Andrea Borman
Honorable Member
- Joined
- Oct 10, 2010
- Messages
- 1,166
I see what you're saying. But how does Apple get away with the very same thing?Cat, you know that if Microsoft gets too much deeper into hardware they are going to get hit by some stupid *** law suit. Like the crap about the Messenger and Media Player. Then something like you have to make a version that is designed to run your systems and a seperate version that is made to run on anything else. pffffft. It's is gays ifs you asks me's....My Squizgar impersination...did it sound right? LMAO
That's exactly what happened. It was my mother-in-law's computer, and her son added 512MB of RAM to it. But in doing so, he lied to her. She thought all along that she had it's max, 2GB, & didn't.The prices for RAM was so much different then. Not only that but paired stick where as uncommon as single sticks are now. One of the practices that was common was to just add on to what was there. So in your case it had a 256 MB in it, and a 512 MB was added.
The first that I bought was two 512MB sticks to bring my Latitude C640 from 256MB (128MB x2) to 1GB. Made a huge difference, both on the computer performance & my credit card balance. $180 for those two sticks, from Crucial Technology. Didn't know of Newegg back then.I remember the first time I bought ram, it cost $300 for 4 megabytes.
I had to discard the 1 meg stick I had in the computer.
And that was about as much as anything could use then.
Plus $300 was a lot more money then, then it is now.
But you can get a lot more computer for the money now then you could then.
Actually you couldn't get a computer then.
They hadn't been invented yet.
I don't know what time you are talking about. But the first computers were built in the 30's and I worked on Zuse computers in 1958 and then on those in the 60's.
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